Police, Drivers Prepare For End-Of-Summer DUI Enforcement

DETROIT (WWJ) – As law enforcement agencies ramp up efforts to crack down on drunk drivers, police are warning motorists not to let their summertime fun end with a DUI arrest. Additional drunk driving patrols will be set up in eight Southeastern Michigan counties from August 19 to September 5.

The Michigan Office of Highway Safety Planning (OHSP) is coordinating the “Drunk Driving. Over the Limit. Under Arrest.” crackdown by administering federal traffic safety funds to more than 200 agencies in 35 counties. Grant-funded counties in Southeast Michigan are Lenawee, Livingston, Macomb, Monroe, Oakland, St. Clair, Washtenaw and Wayne.

OHSP Director Michael L. Prince said extra officers will be out on the road, looking for drunk drivers.

“Motorists need to be aware that it’s simply not worth the risk. If they are caught over the limit, they will find themselves under arrest,” he said in a written statement.

During last year’s Labor Day drunk driving crackdown, more than 500 motorists were arrested for drunk driving and other alcohol-related offenses. According to Michigan State Police Criminal Justice Information Center, 21 people died in Michigan crashes over the 2010 Labor Day holiday weekend. Ten of those fatalities involved alcohol, including five people who were killed in one crash.

About 38 percent of traffic fatalities in Michigan involve alcohol or drugs, and last year, 357 people died as a result of alcohol or drug-involved traffic crashes. Over the 2010 Labor Day holiday weekend, 21 people died in Michigan crashes.

Motorists face severe penalties for driving drunk. Those convicted of a first drunk driving offense face up to 93 days in jail, up to a $500 fine, up to 360 hours of community service, six points on a driver’s license and up to 180 days’ license suspension.

Anyone arrested for a first-time drunk driving offense with a .17 blood alcohol content or above faces increased penalties including the possible installation of an ignition interlock device preventing the car from starting if the driver has been drinking.

In addition, convicted drunk drivers will be subject to a $1,000 fee for two consecutive years, for a total of $2,000 in additional costs. Anyone who refuses a breath test the first time is given an automatic one-year driver’s license suspension.

Cracks me up, the penalties for DUI. Certainly not downplaying the seriousness. However, being someone that drives on roads all the time in many states, driving with your “smart” phone texting, reading it, trying to talk on it, is an epidemic much worse and more rampant than DUI could ever imagine being. And all we do is “poo, poo” it. The number of people distracted, or really, IMPAIRED, by using their “smart” phone is astronomical compared to DUI, and the impairment is just as bad. and, people of all ages are are doing it all the time, everywhere. But I guess since it is not alcohol it is okay to be unaccountable, irresponsible and negligent while driving and being impaired. Wake up. Texting and driving and using your “smart” phone while driving is no less a serious crime and a serious problem than DUI. It is time we start applying DUI laws to “smart” phone users. Nah, forget it. It’s not alcohol and any fatal accident that occurs that did not involve alcohol is OK in our society.

Don’t forget how this campaign is being funded. And, don’t forget to look into the statistics these money hungry criminals in their own right, tout as gospel. And, don’t forget the unwritten quotas the steroid driven officers are obligated to fill. The way this whole adventure is orchestrated creates a Criminal atmosphere for the officers to work under without recourse. Drunk driving is bad but, so is the conduct of renegade, steroid driven officers. The constitution is ripe for being crushed a little more under these parameters. There’s already laws on the books for the offenses, we don’t need to build a sensational mob mentality that steps on everyone rights. That federal funding would be better spent on creating jobs.